Nigerian sentenced to 11 years imprisonment in Texas for cyber crime
A 34-year-old Nigerian national, Kingsley Otuya has been sentenced to 11 years in federal prison for his part fraud, money laundering and romance schemes in Austin,Texas.
Otuya netted over $1 million in the process of committing fraud.
One of Otuya’s victims was said to have killed herself after losing hundreds of thousands of dollars and being “emotionally devastated” by the romance scam.
Otuya, according to court documents, used an online dating profile to target at least one of the victims.
He pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering in April 2018.
Authorities began investigating him as part of a series of investigations in Austin into the activities of West African fraud schemes, officials said.
Acting as a “catcher,” Otuya would quickly withdraw fraudulently obtained funds from bank accounts where the victims had deposited money, and would then send the money to his co-conspirators before victims tried to recover their funds.
Authorities said he used fake passports to open nine different bank accounts under false names in Austin and often withdrew $10,000 or less to avoid bank reporting requirements.
Otuya was paid a fee for the fraud proceeds that went through his accounts, the U.S. attorney’s office said.
“This case brutally illustrates how fraud schemes hurt victims not only financially but also emotionally,” said U.S. Attorney John F. Bash. “We will remain steadfast in our efforts to protect Americans from transnational criminal conspiracies.”




